Eastern and Southern Africa
World Vegetable Center
Eastern and Southern Africa
Duluti, PO Box 10 Arusha
Tanzania
Telephone:
+255 736 631440
Email:
info-esa@worldveg.org
Overview
The Center’s African regional program began in 1992 in Arusha, northern Tanzania. Today the World Vegetable Center has professional research and development staff working across Africa on important vegetable crops such as tomato, pepper, onion and cabbage, as well as a range of African traditional vegetables, and partners with more than 40 national institutions and many international organizations.
The Center operates three regional bases in Africa: in Tanzania for Eastern and Southern Africa, in Mali for West and Central Africa – Dry Regions (established 2014), and in Benin for West and Central Africa – Coastal and Humid Regions (2017). There is a liaison office in Cameroon to reach into sub-Saharan Africa with improved vegetable varieties and production technologies.
The vegetable sector in sub-Saharan Africa is severely underdeveloped and vegetable consumption is extremely low. In Africa’s diverse agroclimatic zones, there is enormous potential for smallholder farmers to produce numerous vegetable crops for domestic and international markets.
Vegetables are often the most important source of cash income for smallholder farmers, and indigenous vegetables provide an important source of nutrition, particularly for poor people. New varieties and improved management methods have been developed and extended through training programs for research and extension workers and smallholder farmers.
UPDATE
A step forward in turning ‘forgotten foods’ into ‘opportunity crops’
A step forward in turning ‘forgotten foods’ into ‘opportunity crops’ Interview with Lead author Maarten van Zonneveld The prestigious scientific journal, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS), announced the winners [...]
A giant leap forward for the conservation of vegetable biodiversity in Africa
A giant leap forward for the conservation of vegetable biodiversity in Africa - two new genebanks inaugurated in March 2024, in Tanzania and Eswatini With support from the Taiwan Africa Vegetable Initiative, two [...]
Nutritional and economic benefits of including traditional leafy vegetables in school feeding programs in Kenya
Nutritional and economic benefits of including traditional leafy vegetables in school feeding programs in Kenya – new report 24-1078_Kenya school feeding reportProducers and consumers in the study areas in Kenya expressed a strong [...]
Celebrating the amazing achievements of the Taiwan Africa Vegetable Initiative
Celebrating the amazing achievements of the Taiwan Africa Vegetable Initiative The Taiwan Africa Vegetable Initiative (TAVI) end of project workshop took place on 14 March 2024 in Manzini, Eswatini, attended by more than [...]
A new report assesses vegetable and irrigation systems in Tigray, Ethiopia, before and after the 2020-2022 conflict
A new report assesses vegetable and irrigation systems in Tigray, Ethiopia, before and after the 2020-2022 conflict (Download the report here) Before the 2020-2022 conflict in Tigray, most people relied [...]
Sowing ‘seeds of change’ in Kenya: impacts of the Greener Greens project
Sowing ‘seeds of change’ in Kenya: impacts of the Greener Greens project (Download infobrief) World Vegetable Center (WorldVeg) and SNV concluded phase one of the Greener Greens project in Murang’a County, Kenya, [...]